Skilled to learn

Share this

The very idea that children should "learn to learn" can divide teachers. To some, it's the ultimate aim of education: to send pupils out into the world eager and equipped to find out more. They see it as the best way to light fires instead of fill buckets.

For other teachers, "learning to learn" is pure codswallop.

A debate about it on our website saw one teacher say it was as ridiculous a concept as "eating to eat". Another whose school had tried it described it as "complete nonsense based on a superficial understanding of metacognition devised by some tool with an MA in education", which was then packaged up and sold on to "gullible heads".

If such comments do not seem sufficiently weighty, one might instead turn to the more academic critique by Chris Winch, professor of educational philosophy and policy at King's College London. He writes that learning to learn is "vacuous" if it means we need to acquire a capacity to learn, "since we necessarily have this if we are to learn anything".

"If we needed to learn how to learn before we learned how to read, write and count, it is unlikely that we would get anywhere," he adds. "Abilities are specific - we cannot just be able, we must be able at something or other."

It is easy to be dismissive about learning to learn. It is also easy to be sceptical about some of the different approaches used to teach it, including Building Learning Power (BLP), the subject of this week's special report (pages 4-7). Cynical teenagers - and teachers - may respond with raised eyebrows to requests to explain how their learning demonstrates "resilience, resourcefulness, reflectiveness or reciprocity".

But the steady growth in popularity of BLP in schools shows teachers are finding benefits in it. Like many approaches in education, simply plonking it in the classroom will not work - to paraphrase Bananarama, it's not just what you do, it's the way that you do it.

And, yes, we may all be born ready to learn, just as we are ready to breathe or move. But we can learn skills to control our breathing, and move with athleticism and grace. The skills behind learning require attention, too.

Michael Shaw is editor of TESpro

michael.shaw@tes.co.uk @mrmichaelshaw.

Subscribe to get access to the content on this page.

If you are already a Tes/ Tes Scotland subscriber please log in with your username or email address to get full access to our back issues, CPD library and membership plus page.

Share this

Comments

The guide by your side – ensuring you are always up to date with the latest in education.

Get Tes magazine online and delivered to your door. Stay up to date with the latest research, teacher innovation and insight, plus classroom tips and techniques with a Tes magazine subscription.
With a Tes magazine subscription you get exclusive access to our CPD library. Including our New Teachers’ special for NQTS, Ed Tech, How to Get a Job, Trip Planner, Ed Biz Special and all Tes back issues.